Collection: UV Sterilisers|Dose Requirements for Waterborne Pathogens | Biotech Aquatica

UV-C DISINFECTION SCIENCE
Verified Pathogen Data

UV Dose Requirements for Waterborne & Aquatic Pathogens

Not all UV sterilisers are created equal. The actual UV-C dose required to inactivate a pathogen varies dramatically between organisms. This table shows verified dose rates for waterborne and aquaculture-relevant pathogens only.

60+
Human & Fish Pathogens
mJ/cm²
Primary Dose Unit
μWs/cm²
Alternative Dose Unit
Verified Data
Understanding UV Dose

HOW TO READ THE DATA

UV-C Dose

mJ/cm² | μWs/cm²

UV dose = Intensity × Contact Time. Primary: mJ/cm² (millijoules). Secondary: μWs/cm² (microwatt‑seconds, in brackets).

  • Dose degrades with lamp age (EOLL)
  • Fouling reduces effective transmission
  • Low UVT water requires higher intensity

Log Reduction

KILL RATE

Each “log” represents a 10× reduction in organism count:

  • 90% kill = 1 log (LD90)
  • 99% kill = 2 log (LD99)
  • 99.9% kill = 3 log (LD99.9)

Why Dose Matters

NOT WATTAGE

A “25W” rating tells you nothing about dose delivered at your flow rate. Contact time, lamp age, water clarity, and sleeve fouling all reduce effective dose.

  • We size by actual required kill rate
  • Target organism determines minimum dose
  • System parameters affect delivered dose
Reference Data

UV DOSE RATE REFERENCE TABLE

Verified UV dose requirements for waterborne and aquatic pathogens. Sorted lowest to highest by max known dose. Primary: mJ/cm². Secondary: μWs/cm² (in brackets).

Organism 90% (1 Log)
mJ/cm² | μWs/cm²
99% (2 Log)
mJ/cm² | μWs/cm²
99.9% (3 Log)
mJ/cm² | μWs/cm²
Log Unknown
mJ/cm² | μWs/cm²
Max Dose
mJ/cm² | μWs/cm²
WATERBORNE HUMAN PATHOGENS
Legionella longbeachae 2.9
(2,900)
2.9
(2,900)
Legionella micdadai 3.1
(3,100)
3.1
(3,100)
Shigella flexneri – Dysentery 1.7
(1,700)
3.4
(3,400)
3.4
(3,400)
Shigella paradysenteriae 1.68
(1,680)
3.4
(3,400)
3.4
(3,400)
Legionella bozemanii 3.5
(3,500)
3.5
(3,500)
Legionella pneumophila 3.8
(3,800)
3.8
(3,800)
Ebertelia typhosa 2.14
(2,140)
4.1
(4,100)
4.1
(4,100)
Shigella dysenteriae – Dysentery 2.2
(2,200)
4.2
(4,200)
4.2
(4,200)
Campylobacter jejuni 4.6
(4,600)
4.6
(4,600)
Legionella gormanii 4.9
(4,900)
4.9
(4,900)
Legionella dumoffi 5.5
(5,500)
5.5
(5,500)
Leptospira interrogans 6
(6,000)
6
(6,000)
Leptospiracanicola – Infectious Jaundice 3.15
(3,150)
6
(6,000)
6
(6,000)
Bacillus paratyphusus 3.2
(3,200)
6.1
(6,100)
6.1
(6,100)
Salmonella paratyphi – Enteric fever 3.2
(3,200)
6.1
(6,100)
6.1
(6,100)
Vibrio comma – Cholera 3.375
(3,375)
6.5
(6,500)
6.5
(6,500)
Bacteriophage – E. Coli 2.6
(2,600)
6.6
(6,600)
6.6
(6,600)
Escherichia coli 3
(3,000)
6.6
(6,600)
6.6
(6,600)
Salmonella typhosa – Typhoid fever 2.15
(2,150)
4.1
(4,100)
7
(7,000)
7
(7,000)
Shigella sonnei 7
(7,000)
7
(7,000)
Salmonella enteritidis 4
(4,000)
7.6
(7,600)
7.6
(7,600)
Cryptosporidium parvum 7.9
(7,900)
7.9
(7,900)
Hepatitis virus 8
(8,000)
8
(8,000)
Infectious Hepatitis 5.8
(5,800)
8
(8,000)
8
(8,000)
Enterococcus faecalis 10
(10,000)
10
(10,000)
Giardia lamblia (beaver fever) 10
(10,000)
10
(10,000)
Pseudomonas aeruginosa 5.5
(5,500)
10.5
(10,500)
10.5
(10,500)
Pseudomonas fluorescens 3.5
(3,500)
6.6
(6,600)
11
(11,000)
11
(11,000)
Salmonella typhimurium 8
(8,000)
15.2
(15,200)
15.2
(15,200)
Cryptosporidium sp. (diarrhoeal disease) 2.5
(2,500)
5.8
(5,800)
12
(12,000)
22
(22,000)
Chlorella vulgaris (green water algae) 13
(13,000)
22
(22,000)
22
(22,000)
Giardia Cysts 2.1
(2,100)
5.2
(5,200)
11
(11,000)
22
(22,000)
Rotavirus 24
(24,000)
24
(24,000)
Nematode Eggs 45
(45,000)
92
(92,000)
92
(92,000)
AQUACULTURE & FISH PATHOGENS
Aeromonas salmonicida 3.62
(3,620)
3.62
(3,620)
KHV – Koi Herpes Virus 4
(4,000)
4
(4,000)
ISA (Infectious Salmon Anaemia) 8
(8,000)
8
(8,000)
Lactococcus lactis 8.8
(8,800)
8.8
(8,800)
Saprolegnia hyphae 10
(10,000)
10
(10,000)
CCV (Channel Catfish Virus) 20
(20,000)
20
(20,000)
IHNV (CHAB) 20
(20,000)
20
(20,000)
OMV 20
(20,000)
20
(20,000)
Streptococcus sp. (seawater) 20
(20,000)
20
(20,000)
Ceratomyxa shasta 30
(30,000)
30
(30,000)
Perkinsus marinus 30
(30,000)
30
(30,000)
IHNV (RTTO) 30
(30,000)
30
(30,000)
Yersinia ruckeri 30
(30,000)
30
(30,000)
Vibrio anguillarum 30
(30,000)
30
(30,000)
VHS 32
(32,000)
32
(32,000)
Trichodina sp. 35
(35,000)
35
(35,000)
Saprolegnia (Zoospores) 39.6
(39,600)
39.6
(39,600)
Myxobolus cerebralis 40
(40,000)
40
(40,000)
BKD 60
(60,000)
60
(60,000)
AGD 66
(66,000)
66
(66,000)
CSV 100
(100,000)
100
(100,000)
Ichthyophthirius tomites 100
(100,000)
100
(100,000)
AHNV 105
(105,000)
105
(105,000)
Amyloodinium ocellatum 105
(105,000)
105
(105,000)
Oodinium 105
(105,000)
105
(105,000)
Brooklynella 126
(126,000)
126
(126,000)
Flavobacterium psychrophilum 126
(126,000)
126
(126,000)
Vibrio sp. (oyster) 155
(155,000)
155
(155,000)
Trichodina nigra 159
(159,000)
159
(159,000)
Saprolegnia diclina 170
(170,000)
170
(170,000)
Cryptocaryon irritans 280
(280,000)
280
(280,000)
Costia necatrix 318
(318,000)
318
(318,000)
IPNV 150
(150,000)
336.7
(336,700)
336.7
(336,700)
Why this matters: A unit rated at “25W” tells you nothing about the actual UV-C dose delivered at your flow rate. Contact time, lamp age, water clarity, and sleeve fouling all reduce effective dose. We size sterilisers based on your actual required kill rate and system parameters — not marketing wattage.

NEED HELP SIZING YOUR UV SYSTEM?

Contact our technical team for custom calculations based on your system flow, target pathogens, and water quality parameters.